IN IRAQ, MINORITY CHILDREN HAUNTED BY GHOSTS OF DAESH CAPTIVITY
KHANKE DISPLACEMENT CAMP, Iraq: Brainwashed
and broken, the Daesh group’s youngest victims are struggling to recover from
years of jihadist captivity as they return to their own traumatized minority
communities in Iraq. Dozens of Yazidi and Turkmen children were rescued in
recent months as Daesh’s “caliphate,” notorious for its use of child soldiers
and “sex slaves,” collapsed in Syria. Many have been reunited with their
families, but their mental recovery has been slowed by prolonged displacement,
a lack of resources, and a milieu accustomed to fearing, not forgiving, Daesh
members.
Lama, a 10-year-old Yazidi girl, has
repeatedly threatened to stab herself or jump from a tall building in the few
months since she returned to Iraq. “I fear she’ll never be like other Yazidi
children,” said her mother Nisrin, 34. All names in the family have been
changed to protect their identities. Lama has spent half her lifetime held by
Daesh, who forced her to convert to Islam and speak Arabic instead of her
native Kurdish. During AFP’s visit to her tent in the Khanke displacement camp
in northwestern Iraq, Lama appeared engrossed in a mobile shooting game with
her cousins Fadi and Karam, freed from Daesh around the same time.
Like the boys, Lama dressed in black and
kept her hair short. The trio spoke Arabic to one another, switching to Kurdish
when addressing her mother. “They’re still brainwashed. When they’re bored,
they start talking about how they wish they were back with Daesh (IS),” said
Nisrin, saying no psychologist had visited them. Virtually every generation
coming of age in Iraq has been seared by conflict, presenting an
“unprecedented” challenge, said Laila Ali of the UN children’s agency. UNICEF
does not know exactly how many children Daesh recruited, how many returned or
where they live.
It estimates that 1,324 children in total
were abducted by armed actors in Iraq between January 2014 and December 2017,
when Baghdad declared Daesh defeated, but expects the real number is higher. Of
those freed over recent years, dozens live in orphanages or shelters in
Baghdad, the former Daesh stronghold Mosul, and the Yazidi regions of Sheikhan
and Sinjar. Others accused of Daesh affiliation are in detention, with some
access to psychosocial support in the form of religious re-education. But the
vast majority are growing up untracked and untreated in Iraq’s camps, which
host some 800,000 children. “There are no child psychologists in Dohuk,” said
Nagham Hasan, a Yazidi gynecologist who has become an informal therapist for
survivors amid the lack of resources. The rolling hills of Dohuk are dotted
with camps hosting hundreds of thousands of Iraqis displaced by Daesh,
particularly from the Yazidi heartland of Sinjar further south. Displaced
families rely on aid groups for food and medical care, and there are even
schools in the camps for children. But targeted psychological support for
minors is hard to come by.
Hasan said a dozen groups were implementing
generic psychosocial programs in camps with few results. Yazidi cleric Baba
Shawish demanded international agencies ramp up services. “These organizations
claim to provide mental support, but do you really think someone who spent five
years under Daesh will be cured in five minutes?” he said. “They need days and
months to be rehabilitated.” Forced recruits will need tailored treatments
based on age, said Mia Bloom, a US-based academic studying child soldiers.
Abducted infants may be more easily rehabilitated as they have fewer memories
of life under Daesh, while those taken as teenagers “have pre-conflict memories
and can go back to their happy childhoods,” she told AFP. But those recruited
during formative years, like Lama and Fadi, were taught to despise minorities
and may lack any positive recollections of their hometowns. “They need to have
their religious identities recharged,” said Bloom.
That will require some heavy lifting from
the communities themselves, still terrorized by Daesh and often treating
rescued children as jihadists-in-wait. To counter that assumption, UNICEF hosts
workshops with religious and tribal leaders to reiterate that the children are,
first and foremost, victims of Daesh. “One of the biggest challenges in
rehabilitation and reintegration of children with perceived affiliations is not
so much the children’s experiences, but the negative perception from the adults
around them,” said Ali. Five years after Daesh’s rampage across a third of the
country, minorities are mostly facing the demons haunting their young ones
alone. Nisrin, herself held by Daesh for two years, said she was
self-medicating to cope with her anxiety. “We’re in this tent together day and
night,” she said. “If they were taken out for a few hours per day, I could rest
and they could learn something.”
Source: arab news- 15 July 2019
https://bit.ly/2Ln7pJM
Comments
Post a Comment